Roberts Books
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Collectible price: $32.95

Self-help to healingReview Date: 2008-06-30
A deeply healing experienceReview Date: 2007-04-01
As most abuse-survivors know, it is so difficult to let go of this self-hatred: it comes from being programmed to believe that what happened, happened because we deserved it, because we were inherent GUILTY. It's lodged in our cells. Daniel Quinn, one of the 53 people who gave their view on forgiving the unforgivable, writes: "The torture devised by your parents for you and your sister was specially designed to destroy your humanity by forcing you to become torturers yourselves."
And: "The scar they wanted you to bear forever was a guilt that must seem unforgivable no matter how clearly it's shown to be understood."
By writing this now, I still feel the tremendous gratitude I felt by reading Quinn's words - recognizing the truth in them - as well as the other 52 writers' contribution. For anyone having been abused, knows that it all comes down to forgiving, and we surely need all the help we can get on HOW to forgive. The book lifted me up and allowed me to see my own shining humanity: it was not destroyed. It allowed me to look deeply into my torturers' soul; and find it there too; hidden behind a guilt so deep that they needed to put it on someone outside themselves to survive.
And I felt a huge joy spread inside: as an adult, I could have chosen to do the same with my child - and I did not.
So where there was selfhatred and agonizing selfcontempt and disgust before, is joy now. We can survive, when we remember who we truly are - and this book has helped me to remember.
Courage at its bestReview Date: 2006-11-26
Child abuse is a topic of discussion at the forefront of today's headlines. But in the past it was something that you did not discuss. It was something that was hidden from the eye of others. For too many years people turned a blind eye on both the victim and abuser. This book forces our eyes to look directly at the issue.
This book shares the responses to the questions: "What would YOU do? You are a child in a family that sadistically abuses. You are forced to torture and destroy. What should you do now as an adult? Do you forgive your parents? HOW do you forgive yourself?"
This book is not for the faint hearted. The types of abuse that are discussed sickened me. How the author Lois lived through the abuse she describes, is beyond imagining. The physical scars are only the beginning. The emotional scars are even worse and take longer to heal, if they ever heal. "How can I forgive my parents, people who tried to force me to hate myself, live in terror, and forget and/or rewrite my childhood? Am I heartless because, I do not feel empathy for them? In order to abuse me as they did, my parents had to stop seeing me as a human being. Are there acts too horrific to forgive?"
After all these years Lois still has not forgiven herself. Few if any would consider her guilty of anything. But still she searches for forgiveness. Lois, I want you to take a good look at what you have done, given this past, and have a tidal wave of gratitude that you did not turn out like Charles Manson. You've done great. YOU are responsible for having done great. What happened to you was horrible and should never happen again. This is the task -to make a loving world.
This book is well written and documented. The author has poured out her heart and opened old wounds to educate the public concerning a growing epidemic of child abuse. Many of us feel that our parents have been "mean" to us. This is not about a mean parent, it is about parents that degrade and torture and repeatedly abuse their children. I highly recommend this book to everyone. Everyone should have to read this so that they will understand what abuse is and how it affects the victims.
Lois, I think you are courageous to share your story in "Forgiveness and Child Abuse." It is my sincere hope that you can find forgiveness for yourself.
Forgiveness, Wholeness, and BeyondReview Date: 2006-06-24
Fifty-three well know personalities responded to this question. The group includes therapists, spiritual advisors, activists, children's advocates, song writers, and other leaders in the field of forgiveness and abuse. The responses of these experts make up the body of the book. Their responses provided healing for the victims of these unspeakable acts and horrendous atrocities: physical, sexual, and verbal. The answers are profound and reveal beautiful insights in personal forgiveness and the resulting freedom this can produce in the victim.
Many of the respondents share their own personal stories of abuse. Award winning writer, Derrick Jensen, observed "We become a family of amnesiacs. There's no place in the mind to sufficiently contain theses experiences." These are stories of heroic battles, of overcoming; fear, anger, bitterness, and survival.
I found the book poignant, haunting, gripping and powerful, a book that calls for action. Dr. Einhorn wrote this book as a tribute to the power of love, and as a testimony that even severe pain can be transformed into a gift of love.
Dr. Einhorn was honored by the World Forgiveness Alliance as Heroine of Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and Peace. She is well qualified to author this work. This book is a must read for child advocates, therapists, spiritual counselors, and for the victims of abuse. It is also a book for school administrators, teachers, preschool specialists, church and community leaders, and for policy formulators in government office.
Powerful, profound reading.
An intimate and searchingly memorable collection of many touching and informative stories Review Date: 2006-04-03

Wish I had learned about this book beforeReview Date: 2008-02-23
Condition of new book from Amazon is not new.Review Date: 2007-09-11
A great introductory book on neuroscienceReview Date: 2005-08-11
Excellent Book for NeuroscienceReview Date: 2006-04-01
Clear, concise, helpful text for a beginning grad student!Review Date: 2004-10-19

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Fantastic introductionReview Date: 2008-02-16
It's hard to imagine a better introductory textbook for this topic.
A great introduction!Review Date: 2000-11-19
terrific textbookReview Date: 2003-04-17
Good as an overall, not for the detailsReview Date: 2003-05-11
I do not think this book is useful for someone intending to code a genetic programming algorithm.
Excellent, comprehensive and easy to read.Review Date: 2002-01-29
The book is very complete and detailed yet easy to read, even after a day of work.
The first part of the book contains introductory information on background areas like probability, biology and computer science as a general discipline.
Getting into the topic, it clarifies some of the differences between evolutionary systems and genetic algorithms and shows how all this contributes to the theory of genetic programming and the evolution of computer programs.
It explains how things are done with different types of individuals (tree, linear, graph, etc) and gives valuable insight about the implementation process.
Although you may need other sources for formal treatment of some topics, this book is a very good acquisition.
Collectible price: $89.00

GeorgieReview Date: 2008-03-13
Georgie is EndearingReview Date: 2005-10-23
A CHILDHOOD CLASSICReview Date: 2000-09-16
An old time favorite.Review Date: 1999-10-14
Brings back great memories!Review Date: 2000-11-28
It's such a fun book!


Golf Psychology for WomenReview Date: 2000-11-13
Everyday Confidence!Review Date: 2000-11-14
Golf Psychology for WomenReview Date: 2000-11-13
Easy steps for golf successReview Date: 2000-12-12
A tough game made easier!Review Date: 2000-11-13

WiseguyReview Date: 2001-11-21
"Like I'm A Clown...I'm Here To Amuse you?"Review Date: 2001-07-17
"Goodfellas" remains America's penultimate crime film; the "Godfather" is Hollywood's version of what wiseguys are like; "Goodfellas" depicts them as how they really are.
This Faber paperback edition of the screenplay, with a foreward by David Thompson ("Scorsese on Scorses") reproduces all of the dialouge verbatim (including the scenes that were improvised on the set such as the famous "what's so funnny about me" sequence between Joe Pesci and Ray Liotta).
The book serves as both as written testamint to what great movie making is all about and as a primer for budding screenwriters.
As a bonus, there is a listing of all the music Scorcese used on the soundtrack (no small part of what made the movie a classic),including those selections that were unfortunately deleted from the commercial issue on Atlantic records).
As Joe Pesci's character might say--"this is one great -------book!"
A classic screenplay to a classic film.Review Date: 2000-03-19
Fantastic ScriptReview Date: 2002-11-04
But, if you DO love the film and would like to read the screenplay, then this is just the thing for you. Written by Martin Scorsese and Nicholas Pileggi, "Goodfellas" is an amazing script that sucks you in right away.
Henry Hill has always wanted to be gangster, as he states in the very beginning of the film. This is his story of how he became one and everything he had witnessed and experienced. It's a tragic story of how good things always have to come to an end. It's also about how power and money can grab hold of your life until it's too late to turn back. A tale full of crime, murder, paranoia, and greed, "Goodfellas" is a trip down Mafia Lane that you will never forget. This is Mr. Hill's story.
The script is based on Nicholas Pileggi's novel, "Wise Guys," which is also based on a true story. The dialogue is sharp and very realistic and gives us a window into the lives of people in the Mafia. It is a very quick read, only about 130 pages. That's pretty short, considering that the movie was at least 2 and a half hours long. But, it's just dialogue, which is why it is very easy to read it quickly. I finished it in less than a day.
If you love the film "Goodfellas," and are interested in reading screenplays, then this is the perfect book for you. Here's your chance to relive some of your favorite moments, this time in writing. A very fine screenplay, it is.
Best Gangster Film Ever MadeReview Date: 2001-09-09
Ray Liotta is excellent as Henry, but the movie's real showcases are the performances of Joe Pesci and Robert DiNiro as his partners in crime. Pesci in particular gives a tour de force performance that is downright frightening. Other first rate performances come from Lorraine Bracco as Henry's Jewish wife and Paul Sorvino, whose performance as a real life Godfather could not be more different than Marlon Brando's.
This film is a must see for anyone who enjoys gangster movies. It also has to rank as THE best American movie of the 1990s.

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Amazing GraceReview Date: 2003-08-05
Also of note would be the fact that Lacey attempts (and succeeds) at presenting the seemingly ethereal Grace as a person, not the sex symbol or ice queen she is usually remembered as. He does give a lot of insight into her love life and various affairs, but you never lose sight that Grace had this innocence about her. It seemed as if she could do no wrong.
Aside from being a talented actress, Grace was a true beauty and a dedicated mother and wife. She will always be remembered as our very own princess.
They Don't Make them like Her AnymoreReview Date: 2005-08-05
Grace Kelly was mine, and I can still remember her clear Teutonic skin, lugubrious soft hair, her casual sophistication, all completely new fascinations to my mundane childhood. Years later, the only thing that's changed is I've grown older and she's still impossibly perfect.
What Robert Lacey has done in Grace is bring us all a little bit closer to that Snow Princess whom we all would have made our Princess were we a Prince. Behind the camera, behind bedroom doors, behind the veneer of an idyllic fairy tale that proves that fairy tales are exactly that, each anecdote is like a stitch in a grand painting that is sometimes bleak (Grace ages and somewhat pathetically begins to fool around with younger men), sometimes inspiring (her persistence at overcoming her natural dramatic flaws), and always sensual (her intimate fashion shows for her boyfriend Don Richardson).
Unlike many biographies of screen legends, Lacey largely eschews extended back lot stories that might involve but not support the basic image of Grace that he believes must be told. So while we learn High Noon's screenwriter Carl Foreman meant his film as an allegory about Communist witch hunts, we are spared a complete A-Z on the Hollywood Blacklist and its artistic implications. A great biography of a great person must not necessarily take on the great issues of his day. Of which Lacey understands.
Grace is a woman of terrific sexual energies and ambitions but just as importantly, sports a marvelous capacity to mask those penchants. So instead of becoming Jenna Jameson, she turns into Princess Grace, a woman who sleeps her way to the top but seems so inevitably suited for the position that no one can possibly begrudge her it.
As Lacey says "She managed to be naughty while appearing very nice."
It's become axiomatic that the greatest personalities are deeply contradictory. Nearly every biographer, when faced with the compelling weight of his research, is forced to concede that mankind is a very complex being (thank you, Mr. Stevenson). And Grace was no different. Lacey talks of Grace's growing conservatism, her disputes with her daughters over their flagrant ways, all while engaging in her own illicit love affairs as Princess Grace. And what of her devoted Catholicism? How to resolve her piety with her philandering?
Questions which can only be answered by Hitchcock's own. This is a snow covered volcano we're dealing with here.
And sometimes, you can't guess; you can only watch.
A real woman, but not "promiscous"Review Date: 2005-06-05
It's a very good book about a real woman of extraordinary beauty who could have settled for a society matron's life in Philadelphia but who made an extraordinary life for herself through her own efforts. Read it for that and not the sensationalism.
great bookReview Date: 2002-01-05
It Told Me Just What I Wanted to Know About HerReview Date: 2001-11-12

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Great for understanding China's foreign policyReview Date: 2007-09-19
Mandatory reading.Review Date: 2000-02-03
Excellent!
reveals the vulnerability of the people's republic of chinaReview Date: 2001-07-28
Must read for students of contemporary ChinaReview Date: 2000-06-16
useful but flawedReview Date: 2001-09-13
This book is a good corrective to the growing right-wing trend of playing up the "China threat". Ross and Nathan make clear that China's goals are not particularly ambitious and their capabilities so limited that even if the sinister cabal of Communists plotting against America's beneficent reign were real, it would be hard pressed to act out its evil intentions. Chapter 8, in particular, demolishes the idea that China's military will any time soon provide a real challenge to Japan, much less the USA.
Despite the great service Ross and Nathan provide in refuting the containment school's arguments, this book also has basic problems. Because it is a survey, the authors can only superficially treat each of the many issues raised. They do a good job of integrating history and current events, and the book should be quite useful for those mostly unfamiliar with its topics, but for those with more detailed knowledge it will often by unsatisfying.
Second, the authors use the national security paradigm to orient their analysis, but seem unaware of the drawbacks to such an approach. "National" security indulges the false idea that all groups and individuals within a nation can share the same interests and that national leaders act, fundamentally, on behalf of the whole population. In reality security policies generally hurt the interests of some groups while advancing those of others, and China's leaders act to perpetuate their own power and the power of the Communist Party, and to protect the interests of the increasingly influential business elite. The authors' inability to consider such matters leads them to seriously downplay the ruling class's increasing economic exploitation of workers and its violent domination of ethnically non-Han peoples in East Turkestan/Xinjiang, Tibet/Xizang, and Inner Mongolia.
And finally, the authors approach the subject from the perspective of the engagement school, which has both strengths (discussed above) and very serious weaknesses. Proponents of engagement are ideologically incapable of seeing that the current global economic system is based on inequality, exploitation, and the denial of people's basic needs (food, health care, shelter) and that it is upheld by American military domination of other people. Ross and Nathan's ultimate recommendation, then, is that China be safely integrated into this system -- not because doing so will help the Chinese people, but because doing so removes a threat to the safe operation of a fundamentally unjust world order.

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Strong WorkReview Date: 2008-01-10
Great book, great service!!Review Date: 2006-03-18
On time, twisted ...Review Date: 2006-03-13
best textbook of hand surgeryReview Date: 2001-10-25
Reviewing Green`s operative surgeryReview Date: 2000-01-18

My favorite novelReview Date: 2006-05-02
Rightfully back in printReview Date: 2005-12-03
Great storyReview Date: 2001-07-26
"Greenwillow" by B.J Chute. An old favoriteReview Date: 2001-06-06
Charming and timeless taleReview Date: 2001-12-19
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Reviewed by LuAnn Morgan for RebeccasReads (6/08)
When Lois Einhorn was a child, she endured unspeakable abuse. She was beaten, tortured and sexually assaulted by the two people who were entrusted to nurture and care for her - her parents. In writing this book, Ms. Einhorn asked a variety of people from all walks of life to read her story and contemplate the answer to the question, "Would you forgive?" The answers she received ran through an entire gamut of alternatives. Some said yes, others said no. Yet, it was the ones who refused to answer or who shared their feelings and left the answer up to her (and the reader) that make up the most crucial responses. These are the opinions that seem to bring the readers closer to the heart of the issue as it forces them to think about what they themselves would do in a similar situation.
The book begins with a brief history of what Einhorn (and her sister) went through as children. The heart-rending tale of the horrors these two little girls lived with day in and day out will make the reader take pause and thank God for the parents he or she had.
Could anything be worse than a child forced to crawl around on all fours for an entire day, while being beaten and gorged with wires and electrocuted? Could anything be worse than being tortured and forced to torture your own sister and kill animals?
The answer, unfortunately, is yes. What is truly worse is to live with the after-effects of growing up in those conditions and then, having to suffer the guilt of taking part in the psychotic schemes of two obviously disturbed adults.
That's what Einhorn had to come to terms with and it's the reason behind the book.
The responders include journalists, authors, doctors, trauma experts, psychologists, actors, activists, researchers, educators, politicians, religious leaders and more. They also include men who for one reason or another are serving time in prison for their own crimes against society.
The answers will, at times, make the reader angry, especially when they question Einhorn's feelings. The fact that she survived and went on to make enormous strides in her life is nothing short of miraculous. She has every reason to be commended for her contributions as an adult to the world we all face daily.
Truly, this book ranks at the top of those contributions. It is a book that will provide solace to those who have faced similar violence and to those who haven't. They are the ones who need to come to an acceptance and understanding about the suffering many children have to endure. They are also the ones who can step forward and try to put a stop to that same suffering.
I found "Forgiveness and Child Abuse" nothing short of phenomenal. It's a wonderfully candid and thoughtful book that takes the reader on a voyage of discovery into a world few are privy to. This book will stay on my shelf until I meet someone who needs it for their own healing. At that point, I will pass it on.